The first inhabitants of Sicily
were the Sicans, Elymi, Ausonians and Sicels. But it was only with the
arrival of the Greek colonizers that Sicily entered “Great History”
(8C BC). The Greeks founded almost all the first Sicilian cities along the
coast: Naxos, Syracuse,
Lentini, Catania, Messina. Their inhabitants, in
turn, founded new cities: Taormina, Megara Hyblaea, Gela, Selinunte,
Himera, Milazzo, Agrigento, Segesta, Lilybaeum, etc. These cities were
first ruled by Oligarchies and later by Tyrannies. The most powerful
Tyranny was that of Syracuse, which eventually subjugated all the other
cities. But it soon came into conflict with Carthage, which had managed to
consolidate its presence in the western tip of Sicily, taking control of
Motya, Panormos and Solunto. The conflict ended with the victory of the
Syracusans in the battle fought at Himera (480 BC). The war between the
two powers, however, continued with alternating fortunes until Rome took
the place of Syracuse, inheriting its historical role. Only after the
three Punic Wars and the destruction of the Carthaginian Empire did the
Romans gain effective control of Sicily. The island was then made into a
Province, with a Praetor in Syracuse and two Quaestors, one in
Syracuse
and the other at Lilybaeum. Sicilian agriculture was strongly developed
under Roman rule, and the island enjoyed a period of peace which lasted
for centuries. It later passed under the jurisdiction of the Eastern Roman
Empire, and a new era of peace began, with the introduction of the
Christian faith and of Byzantine culture.

In 827, however, the island was
invaded by the Saracens, whoimposed
their iron rule. During the second half of the 11C, a Christian army led
by Robert “the Guiscard” and his brother Roger I of Hauteville, who
had been mandated by the Pope in Rome, freed the island from Arab control.
In 1130 the Kingdom of Sicily was created and, at Christmas that same year,
Roger II of Hauteville was proclaimed first King of Sicily. He extended
the Sicilian dominion, creating a vast kingdom which stretched from
Montecassino to Albania and the North African coasts of Tunisia and Libya.
The Hauteville dynasty gave another two great sovereigns to Sicily,
William I and his son William II. Men of science and letters, politicians
and artists from all over the world gathered at Palermo’s court, turning
it into a magnificent centre of international culture. After the death of
William II, in 1189, the Hauteville dynasty was replaced by that of the
Hohenstaufens. The short and tragic reign of Henry VI was followed by a
return to ancient splendour in 1208, with the accession to the throne of
Henry’s son, the great Frederick (I of Sicily; II of the Empire).

A great statesman, well-versed
in administration, natural science and mathematics, he promoted the
development of a new, pre-Renaissance culture at his court. On his death
(1250), a period of political unrest began. The crown of Sicily (a vassal
of the Holy See) was assigned by the Pope to Charles of Anjou, the brother
of the King of France. The Angevins (French) went so far as to subject
Sicily to military occupation. This led to the Vespers Revolution, which
broke out in Palermo on Easter Monday 1282, causing the expulsion of the
Angevins from the island. The legitimate heir to the throne was King Peter
of Aragon who, supported by the Sicilian nobility, was crowned King of
Sicily (Crown of Trinacria), which had replaced the Angevins (supported by
France), proved to be weak. In the 14C, in fact, the great aristocratic
families gained effective control of the island thanks to their economic
and military power. The most important – the Alagona, Peralta,
Ventimiglia and Chiaramonte families – as a matter of fact divided
Sicily into four spheres of influence. This was the period of the four
Vicars. In 1392 – after about one century of political weakness on the
part of the Crown of Trinacria, and after the doubtful outcome of the
Vespers War against the Angevins of Naples (they maintained the title of
Kings of Sicily) – the Aragonese of Spain strongly repressed Sicilian
aspirations to autonomy. In 1415, Sicily was joined to the Crown of Aragon
and was thus ruled by Viceroys. In the 15C King Alfonfo “the Magnanimous”
(of Aragon and Sicily) managed to reunite the two parts of the ancient
State (Sicily and southern Italy), which he refunded as the Kingdom of the
two Sicilies.

France fomented a
series of revolts, which broke out between the 16C and the 17C. In 1672,
during the war against Spain, Messina eventually rose up in arms, openly
supported by the France of Louis XIV. But, in spite of their victories at
sea and on land, in 1678 the French abandoned Augusta and Messina; the
latter was severely punished by the Crown, and thus entered an
irresistible process of decline. At the beginning of the 18C, Sicily was
involved in the Spanish and Polish wars of succession (1700-1738). During
a thirty-year period, the island was forced to yield its crown first to
the Savoy dynasty, then to the Emperor of Austria Charles VI and, finally,
to the Spanish Charles of Bourbon, who began the dynasty of the Bourbons
of Naples and restored the autonomy of the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily.
Due to the French invasion, King Ferdinand of Bourbon moved to Palermo for
a few years. Here he had to yield to the aspirations to autonomy of the
aristocracy by promulgating a Constitution (1812). However, when monarchic
authority was restored in 1816, he repudiated the Constitution and
dissolved the Sicilian Parliament. In 1820-21 the first anti-Bourbon
uprising broke out. During the revolution of 1848, the supporters of the
cause of independence created an autonomous Parliament in Naples, and
later proposed that an independent Sicily and the other Italian State
should join to form a federation. The Revolution was put down by military
force. The war of 1860-61 eventually ended with the annexation of Sicily
and southern Italy to the Kingdom of Italy, ruled by the House of Savoy.
On 15 May 1946, a legislative decree granted regional autonomy to Sicily
on the basis of a special Statute. In April 1947, the first Sicilian
Regional Parliament was appointed.

1943: Allied Forces
Landing in Sicily

Norman
Palace in Palermo.
This Palace Build by Roger II, Today is
the Seat of the Sicilian Regional Assembly